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PHOTOSYSTEM II PROTEIN33, a Protein Conserved in the Plastid Lineage,Is Associated with the Chloroplast Thylakoid Membrane and Provides Stability to Photosystem II Supercomplexes in Arabidopsis
Authors:Rikard Fristedt  Andrei Herdean  Crysten E Blaby-Haas  Fikret Mamedov  Sabeeha S Merchant  Robert L Last  Bj?rn Lundin
Abstract:Photosystem II (PSII) is a multiprotein complex that catalyzes the light-driven water-splitting reactions of oxygenic photosynthesis. Light absorption by PSII leads to the production of excited states and reactive oxygen species that can cause damage to this complex. Here, we describe Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) At1g71500, which encodes a previously uncharacterized protein that is a PSII auxiliary core protein and hence is named PHOTOSYSTEM II PROTEIN33 (PSB33). We present evidence that PSB33 functions in the maintenance of PSII-light-harvesting complex II (LHCII) supercomplex organization. PSB33 encodes a protein with a chloroplast transit peptide and one transmembrane segment. In silico analysis of PSB33 revealed a light-harvesting complex-binding motif within the transmembrane segment and a large surface-exposed head domain. Biochemical analysis of PSII complexes further indicates that PSB33 is an integral membrane protein located in the vicinity of LHCII and the PSII CP43 reaction center protein. Phenotypic characterization of mutants lacking PSB33 revealed reduced amounts of PSII-LHCII supercomplexes, very low state transition, and a lower capacity for nonphotochemical quenching, leading to increased photosensitivity in the mutant plants under light stress. Taken together, these results suggest a role for PSB33 in regulating and optimizing photosynthesis in response to changing light levels.PSII is a multiprotein complex in plants with 31 identified polypeptides (Wegener et al., 2011; Pagliano et al., 2013). It is associated with an extrinsic trimeric light-harvesting complex (LHC), forming the PSII-LHCII supercomplex. The PSII complex performs a remarkable biochemical reaction, the oxidation of water using light energy from the sun, which profoundly contributes to the overall biomass accumulation in the biosphere (Barber et al., 2004). Consequently, the stability and functional integrity of the PSII-LHCII supercomplex is crucially important for photosynthetic function. The energy of a photon, either absorbed directly by PSII or indirectly via energy transfer from adjacent antenna chlorophyll (Chl) molecules, excites the PSII reaction center P680. The excited state, P680*, can transfer an electron to pheophytin, producing the most powerful oxidant known in biology, P680+, which can remove electrons from water. Excessive input of excitation energy into PSII saturates the electron transfer system and causes either acceptor or donor site limitation in the complex. This results in increased production of reactive oxygen species (ROS): singlet oxygen at the PSII donor side and superoxide at the acceptor side (Munné-Bosch et al., 2013). Several protective mechanisms have been documented that decrease the production of singlet oxygen at the PSII donor side in photosynthetic eukaryotes. Notably, reducing energy transfer from LHC to PSII via nonphotochemical quenching (NPQ) is a key avoidance mechanism (Ruban and Murchie, 2012).Despite years of intensive study of PSII structure and function, new proteins that are associated with the PSII complex continue to be discovered, including an increasing number involved in the stability and organization of PSII-LHCII supercomplexes (García-Cerdán et al., 2011; Lu et al., 2011a; Wegener et al., 2011). Two complementary approaches (Merchant et al., 2007; Lu et al., 2008, 2011b; Ajjawi et al., 2010) that utilize phylogenomics (GreenCut) and large-scale phenotypic mutant screening (Chloroplast 2010 Project; http://www.plastid.msu.edu/) were employed by our groups to discover novel plant proteins with roles in photosynthesis. GreenCut identifies proteins found only in photosynthetic organisms, and it is likely that many of them are involved in biochemical processes associated with the structure, assembly, or function of the photosynthetic apparatus and the chloroplast that houses it (Merchant et al., 2007; Karpowicz et al., 2011). The Chloroplast 2010 Project was a large-scale reverse-genetic mutant screen in which thousands of homozygous Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) transfer DNA (T-DNA) insertion lines were analyzed for defects in the rise and decay kinetics of Chl fluorescence (Lu et al., 2008, 2011a, 2011b; Ajjawi et al., 2010).The GreenCut and Chloroplast 2010 approaches both identified the Arabidopsis At1g71500 locus as encoding a protein of unknown function with potential relevance to photosynthesis. In this work, we demonstrate that plant lines carrying three independent mutations at this locus display severe light-induced photoinhibition due to a less stable supramolecular organization of PSII. Biochemical analyses revealed that this protein is associated with PSII complexes, and since the last described PSII protein was called PHOTOSYSTEM II PROTEIN32 (PSB32), we named the gene PSB33. The nuclear genome-encoded PSB33 is predicted to have a chloroplast transit peptide and a transmembrane domain. The biochemical analyses presented below indicate that PSB33 is required for the proper interaction and stability of PSII-LHCII supercomplexes and, in turn, in regulating photosynthesis in response to fluctuating light levels.
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